Saturday, November 19, 2011
Yeah, a US delegation is in Iraq -- even if the US media pretends otherwise
I do read the public e-mail account on Saturday and Sunday. Only time -- other than holidays -- when I'm the only one reading it and a number of e-mails are asking, "Was that true?" Or, "If that's true, why wasn't anyone else reporting it?"
It was true. It's what Al Mada reported. I translated that accurately. Your next question should be was Al Mada correct in its report?
Yes.
And let's prove it with a picture.
Al Rafidayn reports that the delegation met with Jalal Talabani today and they were accompanied by US Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey and the top US Commander in Iraq Lloyd Austin -- in the picture above Austin's on the far left, then Jeffrey. Talabani sits in a chair on the far right. Who are the two in the middle? The one closest to Talabani, the one with the grey hair is Dennis McDonough who is currently the Deputy National Security Advisor, a position he's held since October of last year. The other man in the photo? Al Rafidayn states that Antony J. Blinken, who is the National Security Advisor to the Vice President, also met with them. I can't see his face clearly and last time I saw Blinken he had greyer hair. Dark, but it had grey in. Maybe he's touched it up -- not a problem, if he has, not mocking if he has. Just noting, Al Rafidayn says that's who was present and I can't see the face clearly and the hair's a bit darker than the last time I saw Tony.
The picture's not from Al Rafidayn's story, by the way. There is no picture with their story. The picture is from Jalal Talabani's official website (and they say it's Tony as well).
Once again, the question to ask is not why we note it, the question why US outlets don't.
Do you see any big news out of Iraq (there's one thing, hold on for that) today or yesterday?
Does the US media not generally treat US officials visiting another country as news?
So why are they burying this, why are they ignoring it?
Maybe because it takes a lot of lying to keep an illegal war going. But you've got your picture. The US sent a delegation to Iraq. Al Mada's report was correct.
In news of violence, Al Rafidayn reports that a roadside bombing "south of Baghad" targeted US soldiers leaving three injured and that US forces are said to have responded by firing at and killing civilians (two were killed and five were injured). The US military, the paper notes, denies killing anyone. AGI has the same count and states the incident was in Yusifiyah. AFP reports on it here. The New York Times and other US outlets report on it here -- well, here -- no, here. Uh. Okay, they don't report on it at all. Just like the meeting. Seems there are bits of news that some feel the American people need to be kept from.
In other violence, Reuters notes an attack on a Ramadi police checkpoint in which 4 police officers were killed and four more were left wounded, 2 corpses were discovered in Mussayab and a Baghdad bombing left eight soldiers and two civilians injured.
And Al Mada reports that there are rumors that a big split is about to take place in Iraqiya (the political slate that came in first in the last elections, headed by Ayad Allawi) while Al Rafidayn reports that Iraqi forces have confiscated canned goods -- they're canned goods from Japan and said to put the population at risk (due to the nuclear accident in Japan).
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Iraq and its neighbors
The Turkish government's been praised by a number of commentators of late. Many may wonder why that is. Part of the reason was explained today on BBC's Newhour in a segment broadcast from Turkey. Excerpt:
Robin Lustig: Turkey's been in the business of buying and selling for centuries. I'm in the heart of old Istanbul at the moment, in the spice market, surrounded by the colors, the smells of every spice you could imagine. There's a wonderful smell of coffee wafting on the evening air. These days, though, Turkey is selling something a little bit different. It's selling the idea of Turkish democracy, democracy in a Muslim country.
[chanting is heard]
Robin Lustig: These people are making full use of their democratic freedoms. They're Kurds, they're protesting, noisily, outside the court house, chanting for the release of a young Kurdish student who they say is being held in jail on trumped up charges. Kurds here in Turkey say the country's democratic system is deeply flawed, it fails to protect minority rights.
Robin Lustig: I've come now just a few steps away from the court house and I'm down by the Bosphorus, the strip of water that divides Europe from Asia. And with me here is one of Turkey's best known television stars Banu Guven. She's been telling me that she now has her own reasons for doubting Turkey's democratic credentials.
Banu Guven: I used to work for NTV and I had to quit because a week before the elections here, I was going to host one of the most prominent Kurdish politicians but just three or four days before, the director told me that we couldn't do it. A week before the elections, the government and the prime minister didn't want media to host Kurdish candidates.
Robin Lustig: In many parts of the world now, particularly in the Arab world, people are looking at Turkey as an example of a sort-of model of an Islamic democracy.
Banu Guven: We'd like to be a model for democracy, but we are not any kind of a model to anyone.
For text, you can refer to Robin Lustig's report here and here (the latter includes audio link and notes it's only good for the next seven days). It's really important for a number of players -- including the US government -- that Turkey be seen as a model.
AFP reports on the decision of the Iraqi government not to side with Arab neighbors in condemning Syria. Syria's been having internal problems -- and if that strikes you as "mild," the rest of the US commentary elsewhere should more than make up for my being mild. AFP presents a theory as to why. It's been one theory after another these days. Could it be that with all the other problems it has currently, Iraq just doesn't see the benefits to calling out a neighbor? Or maybe they don't want to appear to be doing the US government's bidding? It's really amazing because Iraqi President Jalal Talabani wants to house members of Muammar Gaddafi within Iraq. I'm not condemning it, I'm not endorsing it. It's not my business. But of the two decisions, one is ignored and one is seized. The one everyone leaps on is the one that might help propel war (with Syria), the one ignored goes to the fact that, yes, these wars are effecting people. No matter how you demonize the leader -- and the US government has been very good about demonizing other leaders in the last nine years -- he or she is still a person and still has family members.
Robert Fisk (Independent of London via ZNet) reviews the region:
The French Foreign Minister Alain JuppĂ© was here "to talk about Syria". Turkey's Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, pontificated that "perhaps because Syria has not enough petroleum, there has been less interest in the West in the killing of Syrian civilians" – probably true – while every Turkish newspaper has been speculating about the Turks' future plans for action in Syria. A Turkish military cordon sanitaire inside the border with Syria seems to be the favourite.
Listening in the old capital of the Ottoman Empire to the mice-turned-to-lions of the Gulf, you could almost believe these were the Last Days of Assad. Personally, I doubt it. When The Wall Street Journal announces his forthcoming demise I reckon he's safe for a good while yet. The Syrian National Council in Istanbul is itself a pretty argumentative mouse, recognised only by the pipsqueak power of the new Libya.
Yet the very final ultimatum from the Arab League – it expires tomorrow – is an extremely serious matter for the Baathist powers in Damascus. Does Syria allow a 500-strong team of observers from the League to go prowling around Homs and Hama and Deraa? Isn't that in itself a real boxer's punch to Syria's sovereignty? The Moroccan ambassador has left Damascus after the attack on his embassy. The Qataris and Saudis left a long time ago. The German ambassador is flaunting what is supposed to be a new draft UN Security Council resolution condemning Syria. Presumably he has discovered some crumbs to throw to the Russians and Chinese to bring them on board.
Since yesterday evening the following community sites -- plus Dissident Voice, IVAW and FPIF -- have updated:
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- Showing Juntas Some Love6 hours ago
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- Oh, no, he didn't1 day ago
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Friday, November 18, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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A Parliamentary session exploring the alleged coup?
We open with that because the obsession with Iraq's oil means many other important things get drowned out. True, oil is one of the main reasons for the illegal war; however, you can't eat it, you can't drink it.
But, again, it is the obsession. Javier Blas (Financial Times of London) reviews the companies interested in oil exploration in the Kurdistan Regional Government. Blas notes in addition to oil, Turkey's eyeing the KRG's natural gas reserves and that Erbil is becoming a boom town. This follows on the deal that the KRG says is a done deal and that the government out of Baghdad is still making noises about. Pierre Bertrand (International Business Times) reports, "After several days of loaded proclamations, a deal may be in the offering between ExxonMobil, the Kurdish regional government, and Iraq's central government, in relation to an oil exploration contract the company signed with Kurdistan that the central government calls illegal ."
Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq notes "Tahreer Square in Baghdad witnesses since last February different types of demonstrators, including terminating political differences and ending corruption dossiers." And they note today's protest included a call for provinces not to move towards being semi-autonomous. Along with today's protesters, the move is opposed by Nouri al-Maliki and Moqtada al-Sadr. Nouri is especially ticked off at the Speaker of Parliament, Osama al-Nujaifi, because he continues to cite what the Constitution states on this issue while Nouri and his lackeys on the 'independent' electoral commission repeatedly attempt to pretend that the Constitution gave the Council of Ministers the right to make these decisions. (Article 119, as McClatchy Newspapers' Laith Hammoudi has reported, notes the process for a province to move to semi-autonomy.) Apparently having difficulty maintaining all of his many grudges, Nouri's focusing on al-Nujaifi but, Al Rafidayn reports, he's decided that Ayad Allawi is a-okay. The Iraqiya leader pissed off Nouri weeks ago when he offered a strong critique to a London paper about the current state of Iraq. Salah Nasrawi (Al-Ahram Weekly) covers the province issue and other developments:
On 2 November, a Sunni-dominated province of Iraq created uproar when its local council voted to establish itself as an "independent region within a unified Iraq."
The provincial council of Salaheddin, which hosts Saddam's hometown of Tikrit, voted by 20 votes out of 28 to set up the new federal region, sparking speculation that other Sunni provinces may now follow suit.
In trying to explain the shift, the council's leaders said that the establishment of an autonomous region was a reaction to the Iraqi government's negligence, exclusion and marginalisation of Sunnis.
They said that the request to set up an autonomous region had been intended to boost the province's share of federal revenues and to protest against the domination of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki's Shia-led government.
Coming in the aftermath of a nationwide crackdown on former Saddam loyalists, the timing of the vote seemed to have been spurred by the firing of more than 100 lecturers at Tikrit University for alleged Baath Party connections and a roundup of suspected Baathists in the province.
Hundreds of former Baathists have been arrested in recent weeks following government reports that they were conspiring to overthrow Al-Maliki's government.
And to clarify on the Salahuddin vote, there are 28 members of the provincial council. Twenty of them voted on the measure. All voting on the measure voted "yes." On the alleged conspiracy, Al Mada reports Iraqiya's Salman Jumaili has declared Iraqiya intends to host a session in the Parliament over the claims of the existence of a conspiracy. With several dents already in Nouri's public claims, the prime minister may be sweating that possible session.
Rand Paul is a US Senator from Kentucky. His father is US House Rep Ron Paul who is currently in a race for the GOP's presidential nomination. Senator Paul's office notes:
Sen. Paul Introduces Resolution to End War in Iraq
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today in the U.S. Senate, Sen. Rand Paul introduced an amendment to the Department of Defense Authorization bill to formally end the war in Iraq.
The war in Iraq cannot be considered definitively concluded if Congress does not reclaim its constitutional power to declare war by repealing the underlying authorization. Until Congress takes this action, the President would still possess the legal authority to move troops into Iraq or to conduct kinetic operations within its borders, agreements with the Iraqi government notwithstanding.
"On several occasions this year, Congress has been ignored or remained silent while the President committed our forces to combat. It is my intention to urge Congress to reclaim its constitutional authority over the decision to go to war, or to end a war - it is one of the body's most important powers," Sen. Paul said. "It is right that we wrest it back from a President who has shown he cannot be trusted to obey the Constitution or powers prescribed to Congress in it."
The President has ordered withdrawal of most forces by the end of the year, and Sen. Paul's amendment continues the spirit of that decision by formally ending the war. Sen. Paul will push for a vote on this measure during consideration of the Defense bill. Under existing laws, necessary actions to protect U.S. personnel in Iraq (such as at the embassy) will still be allowed.
"Americans should celebrate the safe return of our soldiers, thank those who served, and mourn those we lost. We should honor them by committing to a return to a more rational and constitutional foreign policy," Sen. Paul added.
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How stupid is Pew? How stupid do they think America is?
They have a new study and they introduce it with:
A majority of Americans (56%) say the United States has mostly succeeded in achieving its goals in Iraq. And the public is overwhelmingly supportive of winding down U.S. military involvement in the country: Fully 75% approve of Barack Obama’s decision to withdraw all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by the end of the year. Just 21% disapprove of Obama’s decision.
All US troops are not leaving Iraq -- see Tuesday's "Iraq snapshot," Wednesday's "Iraq snapshot," Thursday's "Iraq snapshot" and at Trina's site, Ava's "Scott Brown questions Panetta and Dempsey (Ava)," at Rebecca's site, Wally's "The costs (Wally)" and Kat's "Who wanted what?" for coverage of this week's Senate Armed Services Committee hearing -- and maybe Pew, grasping that, thought they'd go with "all U.S. combat troops."
Funny, I thought combat troops were like gallbladders, you could only remove them once.
For those who've forgotten, the night of August 31, 2010, Barack gave a speech announcing all US combat troops were leaving Iraq.
Oh, okay. So Pew didn't promote that announcement as the departure of combat troops then? So now they are calling this the removal of combat troops? Nope. They promoted that as the withdrawal of combat troops -- and not just once after Barack's speech, but repeatedly for months and months after. They're cited on this in repeat news articles, in scholarly publications and popular ones.
Now they want to say "all U.S. combat troops" again.
It does allow them to be a little more accurate than those claiming "all US troops" but it's dishonest. You can only have your gallbladder taken out once, you can only have combat troops withdraw once (unless, of course, you send them back in).
It's amazing the way outlets and organizations will bend themselves into pretzels to avoid telling the plain spoken truth about what is known to be taking place in Iraq in 2012.
The Moderate Voice makes an interesting catch noting a column "For Sotal Iraq/aka Voice of Iraq, Qasim Al-Kafaji starts out this way:
In 2008, Iraq signed a convention with the United States that includes a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq by the end of 2011. But what’s really eye catching about the agreement is that it is free of U.S. obligation to fill any of the voids that will open when the time comes to pull out. The important and obvious question is: Why didn’t the agreement include a clause initiating the training in 2008 of the Iraqi Air Force on aircraft designed to protect post-withdrawal Iraq so that Iraq’s forces could be ready to take back their air space by the end of 2011?
America has done this deliberately because its plan to withdraw is anything but permanent. In fact, America doesn’t want to leave at all, so it must dream up reasons to stay. The Iraqi government – or to be more specific – the party or person who signed this agreement, bears the brunt of responsibility for signing a convention that disadvantages Iraq. Whoever signed the deal should have involved informed professionals to examine the treaty and expose its deficiencies.
That is interesting. It is also true that by 2007, the US government was openly discussing how Iraq's Air Force would not be ready to patrol the skies of Iraq until at least 2014. As was noted repeatedly in the hearing Tuesday, the US government, while negotiating the SOFA in 2008, expected that a they would renegotiate the SOFA in 2011 to extend it. That's a topic full of twists and turns and you might think columnists would explore that; however, as Bob Somerby has explained, several newspaper columnists are bored and have little to do other than repeatedly go to the well on Mitt Romney's dog.
The following community sites -- plus On The Wilder Side and Antiwar.com -- updated last night:
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- Congressional pay and the ACLU7 hours ago
- Huh?7 hours ago
- Working Class Barack7 hours ago
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- Body of Proof7 hours ago
- THIS JUST IN! PRINCESS ON CAMERA!7 hours ago
- Maybe he'll autograph them7 hours ago
- grimm8 hours ago
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We'll close with this from Sherwood Ross:
SHERWOOD ROSS ASSOCIATES
Media Consultants
November 16, 2011 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Attention: Editors
There’s been much talk about how to cut the military budget. Here are some suggestions from a retired U.S. Navy captain who is now Dean of the new American College of History and Legal Studies, in Salem, New Hampshire.
Interview: Historian Michael Chesson (603) 458-5145.
CUTTING NAVY DEFENSE BUDGET
CAN BEGIN WITH OFFICER RATINGS
A U.S. NAVY CAPTAIN, RETIRED, SAYS
The U.S. Navy defeated the powerful Axis navies of World War Two with just 18 admirals but today it has 216 admirals even though it faces no comparable enemy on the high seas.
What’s more, today’s admirals have far fewer warships and sailors to supervise. There are a total of just 333,000 sailors today compared to 3.4 million in 1945, and the number of warships today is just 286 compared to 6,700 in 1945.
The reason for the explosion of admirals, says U.S. Navy Captain Michael Chesson, Retired, is “grade creep,” the tendency in the Pentagon to increase the rank for a particular job.
Chesson, now founding professor and dean of the new American College of History and Legal Studies, Salem, N.H., writes that the Navy could get by with only one four-star admiral as Chief of Naval Operations.
When the terms of other four-star admirals are up, replace them with with officers “who will have only the three stars of a vice admiral,” Chesson writes. Slots currently filled by (three-star) vice admirals will be filled instead by rear admirals, and the work of one-star admirals would be done by captains.
“Each job designated for a commissioned officer, and especially those in the gigantic shore establishment, whether in the Pentagon, at a base, academy, or whatever, will all be downgraded by one rank,” Chesson suggests.
He goes on to call for the elimination of all uniform boards to eliminate “the countless hours wasted in tinkering with and tweaking various modifications to the enormous variety of uniforms in each branch of the service for male and female personnel.”
“Eliminate service on a uniform board as a career enhancer. Ditch the contracts with civilian consultants, or shoot them. Put the officers who seek this kind of duty in the field chasing terrorists (and) if female personnel don’t like the way a current uniform makes them look, (let them) get a job as a fashion consultant.”
What’s more, he’d ditch “expensive and wasteful efforts to foist corporate group think on officers and the American military in general, so says goodbye to boondoggles like the late and unlamented Total Quality Management, which transmogrified into the Navy’s Total Quality Leadership program.” Chesson adds, “Countless officers spent tens of thousands of hours pushing red and white beads around a sand board...That might work on the playing fields of Walden University but it’s not likely to prove useful in a free fire zone. The military is not a democracy or a commune and it certainly isn’t a college campus filled with aging tenured radicals.”
Chesson says none of his proposals would save big bucks “but if projected over the next 10 years would add up to an amount of dollars that could be spent on our troops, or our wounded veterans in VA hospitals....”
Prior to assuming his position at the American College of History and Legal Studies, Chesson was Chair of the History Department at the University of Massachusetts-Boston. He earned his Ph.D. in history at Harvard. Chesson had 30 years of service, active and reserve, in the U.S. Navy, where he attained the rank of Captain.
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(To arrange for interviews with dean Chesson, please contact him directly at (603) 458-5145 or Sherwood Ross, Ross
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Thursday, November 17, 2011
I Hate The War
A great deal about the press.
Including that they are lazy (there were exceptions, we noted them), that they'd rather all be wrong together than be right all by themselves (again, we noted exceptions) and just how stupid they can be -- All Things Media Big and Small.
Here's the first thing to jot down: Most 'covering' hearings don't know what was said.
What they do is they use prepared remarks. Witnesses provide prepared testimony in writing -- their opening statements (which bad witnesses read word for word aloud) -- and these are embargoed until the hearing but available. The press can get access to them before the hearing starts but the embargo means: "Please, please, don't publish on this until after the hearing starts." The Chair and the Ranking Member usually have their opening statements written out ahead of time and their staff freely distributes them.
With that, most of the 'reporting' you read is done.
What was the big story about the Tuesday hearing?
That John McCain and Leon Panetta had sharp words.
That was the first round of questioning and that was passed off as news because it was gossip. That's what the DC press corps runs on. But anyone really present for the first panel would have been aware that McCain and Panetta had no personal problem and were laughing with one another and thanking one another in the second round. That didn't get slipped into the story because most 'reporters' weren't aware it happened.
Just like they didn't know what was said about Camp Ashraf residents or what was said about drones or that the Chair of the Joint-Chiefs referred to US bases in Iraq that will be used by the US next year as "enduring" bases. His term. He emphasized it and noted it. But the press didn't tell you that.
See, you can write a full story, you can tease it out and pretend like you were there covering the hearing just by a quote from this opening statement of the Chair and that opening statement of a witness and toss in the gossip of the hour and -- BOOM! -- instant story for hearing you don't even know what they discussed.
Leon Panetta.
I like Leon. I've known him for years.
But I've never cast him as a peace-nik. Nor as someone that antiwar types should be applauding. Why would I? Though the press glommed on "Barack's women" with the Libyan War -- Leon was right in there screaming for it as well. He was at odds with Robert Gates. Gates is a Hawk -- so is Leon.
So it's really funny to reflect on the garbage Antiwar.com churned out which paints Leon as the great defender of peace and national soveriengty.
They read the bad reporting presumably.
But they weren't at the hearing so they were unaware that the 'answer' Leon gave wasn't thought up on the spot. Leon came into the hearing with a series of possible remarks to use.
So when John McCain (first round) was hitting on what he saw as the administration's failure to close the deal with Iraq despite the fact that the Iraqi politicians wanted it and were asking McCain and other senators why the White House wouldn't present a plan -- not in May, not in July, never. As the clock ticked down, no plan. To that, Leon pipes up, looking down at his sheet of prepared responses, that Iraq's an independent country.
And Antiwar.com 'reports' that McCain was saying the Iraqi government should be ignored and Leon was defending the Iraqi government's right to decide.
Great.
So now Anitwar.com feels they can 'report' on hearings without knowing what was said or what the exchange was? Great.
Just as lazy as every other outlet, in case you didn't notice.
I don't get it. I don't get why a variety of outlets didn't have press present for that hearing on the status of US and Iraqi relations.
The Progressive, The Nation, Democracy Now!, et al weren't going to be there because they just whore for Barack. We got that in 2008 when they could and did offer that Ralph shouldn't run and they ignored Cynthia McKinney's run and they lied about Barack while treating Sarah Palin as if she were running for president. Even Dan Quayle didn't get that treatment.
They exist to whore and to treat you as cattle that they control and herd. That's why they get the money they get. And that's why they have no real independence.
So we knew the useless whores -- for all their pretense four years ago to give a damn about the Iraq War, for all the times they used the Iraq War to drive up subscriptions, to drive up donations, etc. -- didn't give a damn about Iraq. How many of them ever even did a story on Iraqi women?
No, they weren't going to be at the hearing because they're not planning on telling their audiences the truth about the Iraq War and occupation (which continues, check out the hearing, it's not over).
But Antiwar.com? They weren't going to send someone to the hearing?
And then they 'cover' the hearing with this awful article which ignores all the big events of the hearing -- the ongoing negotiations; the expectation that, as 2012 starts, a deal will be struck between the two governments for trainers; that the US will maintain ten bases; that these bases will have US troops under the DoD umbrella (no, all US troops in Iraq will not be under the State Dept banner as we've been told), the staging platforms outside of Iraq, and so much more.
None of that made it up in the 'report' Antiwar.com did.
But Leon Panetta was presented as somoene who puts respect for another goverment's right to decide ahead of US wishes. Do they not know Leon's history? Seriously?
What we learned is that, with the press, always the lazy students. Always the ones who do as little as possible. Attend a hearing? That might tear them from X-Box and what if it ran into lunch? Just grab the prepared remarks, repeat one anecdote from AP or Retuers repeat filings throughout the hearing and call it a 'report.'
All Things Media Big and Small demonstrated yet again that, with the press, it's not the event itself that matters, it's how the press can do the bare minimum while serving the pretense that they covered the event, that they did their job. W
We covered the hearing in Tuesday's "Iraq snapshot," Wednesday's "Iraq snapshot" and today's "Iraq snapshot" and, in the community, at Trina's site, Ava covered an exchange with "Scott Brown questions Panetta and Dempsey (Ava)," at Rebecca's site, Wally covered economic concers expressed over the use of contractors "The costs (Wally)" and Kat offered a look at various claims about the administration's negotiating goals and what Iraqi leaders supposedly sought with "Who wanted what?" And even with all of that, I could still easily cover the hearing again in tomorrow's snapshot with parts that were newsworthy but that we didn't have space of in the snapshots so far.
This was an important hearing. Very few people treated it as such.
The ones who are going to regret ignoring it the most (or focusing on the trivia from it) will be the likes of The Nation, et al. That's because John McCain had an eye on history and was doing his draft. He invoked history in the hearing. So all of these members of the Cult of St. Barack who just knew they were doing him a favor by ignoring it have instead allowed McCain's judgments, calls and, yes, his facts (he did offer some facts) to stand as the official judgment, unchallenged. Unless the world stops spinning sometime in the near future, this hearing will be remembered and it's a real shame the left chose to take a pass on it. It's a shame because Iraqis remain under occupation and they do matter. But 'independent' media never really thought that, they thought only Barack mattered. (Which is why they're okay with Guantanamo and with the assassination of American citizens and so much more.) If they really wanted to defend Barack, they would have paid attention to John McCain's actual remarks and offered some counter-narrative to them. Of course, that would be actual work and they don't work at The Nation, et al, do they?
It's over, I'm done writing songs about love
There's a war going on
So I'm holding my gun with a strap and a glove
And I'm writing a song about war
And it goes
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Oh oh oh oh
-- "I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!)
Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4485. Tonight it remains [PDF format warning] 4486. Here's the screen snap:
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Iraq snapshot
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